The Etna

8 F. Cas. 803, 1 Ware 474, 1838 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedNovember 20, 1838
DocketCase No. 4,542
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 803 (The Etna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Etna, 8 F. Cas. 803, 1 Ware 474, 1838 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14 (D. Me. 1838).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

The first question, which is presented by the case, arises on the admissibility .and effect of Joseph Walker’s receipt in full for .the wages claimed in the libel. It is said that the father being entitled to the earnings of his child by virtue of his paternal power, and the wages being a debt due to him, in his own right, he had full authority to compromise and settle the suit on such terms as he pleased, although the action was not brought in his name. As a general proposition, it is undoubtedly true that the father is entitled to the earnings of his children during their minority, nor is there any doubt that he may maintain a suit in the admiralty for their wages earned in a maritime service. Plummer v. Webb [Case No. 11,233]. But this is not, like the duties of a parent, a right which is indissolubly attached to the paternal relation. It is a right which may be either renounced by the father, or forfeited. He may renounce it by voluntarily allowing his child to have the exclusive use of the fruits of his own industry; and he may forfeit his right by neglecting to perform those parental duties which are the foundation of the right. It is the duty of the father to provide for his child a home, to protect, to maintain, and to educate him according to the measure of his ability. It is to enable him to do this that the law gives to him the custody and right of control over the person of his child; and, as some compensation for it, allows him to take the fruits of his child’s labor. But this paternal power is not of the nature of a sovereign and independent power. It is subject to the restraints and regulation of law. Upon the principles of the law of nature, as well as of the municipal law of this country, it is inseparably connected with the parental obligations, and arises out of them. It is not a power granted to the parent for his benefit, but allowed to him for the benefit of the child, and it ceases when the faculties of the child have acquired that degree of maturity, that it may safely be trusted to its own resources. When, therefore, the parent abuses this power, or neglects to fulfil the obligations from which it results, he forfeits his rights. If instead of treating his child with tenderness and affection, and bringing him up in habits of industry, sobriety, and virtue, he treats him with such cruelty that he cannot be safely left in his custody; or corrupts the purity and integrity of his nature and trains him up to immorality and profligacy, the protecting justice of the country will interpose and deprive him of the exercise of a power, which, having been allowed for the benefit of the child is perverted to his injury and perhaps his ruin. There are many cases in which the court of chancery in England has interposed its authority and taken children from the custody of their fathers who have abused their parental power, and placed them under the care of persons proper to have the control of them, and to superintend their education. 2 Story, Eq. Jur. c. 35; De Manneville v. De Manneville, 10 Ves. 52; Whitfield v. Hales, 12 Ves. 492; Wellesley v. Wellesley, 2 Bligh [N. S.] 128. I am not aware that any doubt exists that the courts in this coutry have similar authority. It would certainly be a great defect in the laws .of any civilized people, if they furnished no mode by which the innocence and helplessness of infancy, and the purity and ingenuousness of youth could be protected from the brutality of an unnatural parent The community has a deep interest in preserving the rectitude of the young, and in imparting to them such an education and training them to such habits as will render them in manhood useful and not pernicious members of society. As a father may forfeit his right to the custody and control of his child's person by abusing his power, so by. neglecting to fulfil the obligations of a father, he may forfeit his right to the fruits of his child’s labor. If he provides no home for his protection, if he neither feeds nor clothes him, nor ministers to his wants in sickness or health, it would be a most harsh and unnatural law which authorized-the father to appropriate to himself all his child’s earnings. It would be recognizing in fathers something like that preeminent and sovereign authority which has never been admitted by the jurisprudence of any civilized people, except that of ancient Rome, whose law held children to be the property of the father, and placed them in relation to him in the category of things instead of that of persons.2

[805]*805Keeping these principles in view, let ns look to the facts in this case, as they have been proved by unexceptionable witnesses. A number of persons have been examined who have been acquainted with Joseph Walker and his family from one- to four years, or more, and who have testified to the kind of care which he took of his family, • to his habits, his temper, and manner of life. During that time, although constantly residing in the same town, and his place of employment, where he worked at his trade, not being more than half a mile from the residence of his wife and children, he has never lived with them except in some portion of the winter season when he was unoccupied in his trade. The witnesses testified that he never visited his family oftener than once a week, and seldom oftener than once a fortnight, when .he came home on Saturday nights and spent Sunday. That on these occasions hé often returned in' a state of intoxication, when he abused his children with such excess that they have been seen, when their mother happened to be from home, flying from the windows to escape from his violence, and the younger ones have been taken by a family residing in another part of the house, to save them from the brutality of their father. That during this period he has done nothing towards the support of his children, except ' that he sometimes brought some small articles of provision into the family, but less, as the witnesses testify, than he himself consumed in these fugitive and unwelcome visits. The whole burden of providing for the family has been thrown upon the mother, who has labored to the full measure of her strength to provide a support for her children and herself, aided by a part of the earnings of such of the older children as could get employment. For this father, while he neglected all • the duties of a father, was sufficiently tenacious of his supposed paternal power. When hia son was at sea he took to himself a part of his wages, but he allowed a part to go towards the support of the child and the rest of the family. A few days after the son sailed on this voyage, having obtained the surplus money which was distributed among the inhabitants by the city government, he immediately without allowing any part of it to his family, left this city and has not yet returned. The force of this testimony is but very slightly, if at all weakened by that produced by the respondent, while so far as respects his habits of intoxication it is fully confirmed by the unsuspicious testimony of a physician who has known him for eight years, and who testifies fully to his habits in this particular, and has been called to visit him while suffering under delirium tre-mens from habitual intemperance.

Is the father,- under these circumstances, entitled as a matter of right to appropriate to himself the earnings of his son? At the time when he undertook to do it, he had, as we have seen, abandoned his family. He. left the place without giving them any notice of his intentions or his purposes, and they ascertained where he had gone, not from him, but by inquiries of others.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 803, 1 Ware 474, 1838 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-etna-med-1838.